The Courtship Of Sisters Three Poem by David Lewis Paget

The Courtship Of Sisters Three



There were sisters three, and they all were free
In a town called Tavistock,
Freer than they would want to be
As they stared at the Town Hall Clock.
‘Our time is running ahead of us
They will soon call us ‘Old Maid',
Said sister Jill to the younger Phil,
And the eldest one, called Jade.

‘So why don't the menfolk look at us,
We're not that hard on the eye,
Certainly better than Betty Watts
Who married the stable guy.'
‘I danced with him, did you know? ' said Phil,
‘By God, he's a clumsy oaf,
He kept on tripping over his boots,
And stamped on all of my toes.'

‘I had a line on the fisherman, '
Said Jill, ‘and I thought I'd win,
I'd give it a month or two to set,
And then I would reel him in.
But Nancy Croft got her hooks in him
And I see they've tied the knot,
I said, ‘but you were going with me! '
He said, ‘Oh! I'd forgot.'

Then Jade had turned with a waspish look
And she said, ‘Well, look at me!
I'm the eldest and should be wed
By rights, the first of three.
There's only a single guy in town,
He's the only one that's left,
I heard him say he's going away,
He's an army boy, called Jeff.'

But Jill and Phil said, ‘He's not yours,
It's the one that gets there first, '
They were in favour of drawing straws,
But Jade had stamped and cursed.
They said they'd ask him around to tea
They'd cook up muffins and toast,
And then they'd see what they all would see,
By whom he talked to most!

He came attired in his uniform
His scabard by his side,
Placed his sword on the mantelpiece
Where Jade stroked it with pride.
‘My, but you're a fine gentleman
And I see you play the fife,
How sad, you'll march to a battle cry
Without a beautiful wife.'

He sat perturbed, and he looked at them,
At each one in their turn,
‘If only there were three of me, '
He said, but his cheeks had burned.
The sisters jostled to catch his eye,
Were heated and dismayed,
‘I know a way we can settle this! '
And Jill had reached for the blade.

She swung the sword and before they knew,
The soldier lay in halves,
She'd cleft him, clean through the waist, and then
She'd cut off both his arms.
To Jade the head and the torso went,
To Phil, arms worn like a shawl,
Which left Jill what was below the waist,
(She had the most fun of all!)

20 October 2014

Sunday, October 19, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: horror
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
Close
Error Success